Active surveillance (watchful waiting) for eye cancer

If you have eye cancer but don’t have any symptoms, you may be offered active surveillance (watchful waiting). This means that your healthcare team watches your cancer closely rather than giving treatment right away. They will use tests and exams to check if the tumour starts to grow. Treatment is given when you develop symptoms or the cancer changes.

This approach helps avoid problems or side effects that can happen with treatments such as surgery or radiation therapy. There is no evidence so far that people won’t live as long when they get active surveillance compared to other treatments. And there is no evidence that active surveillance has other negative effects if or when you start treatment.

You may be offered active surveillance if:

the tumour is small, is not causing any symptoms and hasn’t spread outside of the eye

the tumour is growing very slowly

the tumour is in the only eye with useful vision

you are older or very ill, which may make it hard to cope with treatment

Taking action against all cancers

The latest Canadian Cancer Statistics report found that of all newly diagnosed cancers in 2017, half are expected to be lung, colorectal, breast and prostate cancers. Learn what you can do to reduce the burden of cancer.